Wed. Dec 25th, 2024

A video by a popular “life hack” YouTube channel features several “period tips for girls”. The tips include items that can be used during menstruation, when regular sanitary products are unavailable.

The video was first posted to the 5-Minute Crafts DIY channel on 14 May 2022. A day later, a clip from the video was posted to the channel’s Facebook group, 5-Minute Crafts GIRLY.

The video shows someone sitting down on a toilet to discover that they’ve started menstruating. They then remove one of their socks and, using double-sided tape, stick the sock onto their underwear in place of a sanitary pad.

Several users seemed outraged by the suggestion. Some comments on the Facebook post read “Seriously! Dirty socks during periods?” and “Dirty sock??? Its a big NO NO”.

The use of socks as sanitary pads has been documented in South Africa and in other countries as an example of period poverty – a lack of access to menstrual products.

But is this a viable alternative to sanitary products in an emergency?

Poor menstrual hygiene, like using unwashed clothing, linked to health complications

Various studies suggest that poor hygiene is associated with health risk. A study in Tanzania found a link between using cloth products during menstruation and bacterial vaginosis, an overgrowth of harmful bacteria that sometimes results in other health complications.

Research from India and Egypt has identified a link between poor menstrual hygiene, like using cloth materials, and reproductive tract infections. In Pakistan, using unwashed clothing or material as menstrual products was linked with secondary infertility, which is when someone struggles to have a baby after previously conceiving.